Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 10 Sep 1891, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

”In Great Sport With the Various Marsupials of Australia. -licy do Not Jump With Their 'l‘uils. but, Those Same Tails Hake livccllcm Snup‘. â€"!Eow a Kangeroo Eilscmhowels a Dog. or :1 man. The traveller whom fate brings to the colonies may journey from end to en; of them, without seeing in the flesh either of the animals that figure upon the Australian . coat-of-arms, the kangaroo and the emu. There are plenty of both in certain districts, but they are many miles away from the railroads, as a rule, and are seen only by those who have occasion to visit remote “ stations,” and to explore the alternate stretches of plain and “ bush," which con- stitute the “ back flocks," as the interior portions of the country are styled in colonial . phraseology. When the early settlers entered the v-ounv , try, they found the iiiei'supial tribc swarm- 3 ing in countless millions all overviL. anl when they sought pasturugc for their flocks. discovered that the ungenerous soil would not furnish grass enough for knn games and ', sheep together. A war of externziimtion I upon the original pasturers upon the larnd‘ was therefore inaugurated, and waged With such deadly cflectthat, at present, a kangar- oo is in most districts quite as conspicuous by his absence as the buffalo upon the plains ‘ of America. The old squatters relate extraordinary i tales of the former abundance of these i strange creaturesfihow the eye could not range in any direction without seeing hun- dreds of them ; how they entered the “ pad, docks ” and grn7cd in the midst of the flier.» : and how, when the grass grew scant and'tlia flocks were on the verge of starvation, , ” drives" were organized, in which thous- ands of the kangaroos Were killed and the, sparse pasturagc was ceased. \Vanton as seems the wholesale slaughter of these animals, it was, from the squatters point of view, a stern and imperative necessity. The only regret of pastoralists in the premises is that they did not then know the fortune that they lost by allowing the carcasses of theslain to lie and rot where they had fallen : for there was no suspicion than that kanga- roo leather was of any value, or that a demand would spring up for it that should make the skin of one of these iminialsworth more than that of the sheep whose protection was bought by their slaughter. So impor- tant has that trade in kangaroo hides now become that the question of how the animals that furnish them shall be preserved has taken the place of devising measures for their extinction. The term “ kangaroo,” which is used gen- 1 erally in most of the World to describe anyl animal that has a ucli for carrying its young and a. long tail, and that pmceeds by jumping on its hind legs is of limited appli- cability in Australia. The kangaroo is dif- ferentiated by many exact particulars from . his cousins the “ wallaroo,“ the “ wallaby.” and the “ paddymelon "‘â€"all of which ‘ strangely named animals appear to the uninitiated only as smaller individuals of the kangaroo’s immediate family. Gener- l ally speaking, the kangaroo is larger than i the wallaroo, the wallaroo than thc Wallaby, ' and the wallaby than the paddymelonâ€" while tapering ofi' from this last-mentioned animal are found other species, which in- clude the “ kangarooo rat ” and end in the diminutive “ kangaroo mouse,” which is the image of the full-grown kangaroo proper when seen through an inverted opera. glass. All these species are further subdivided, so that we have the “great red kangaroo,” the “ blue flyer,” and many others in the first group, " bush ” and “ rock ” wallabics, and paddymelons, black, gray and Drown. All these are easily domesticated except, perhaps, the larger representatives of the kangaroo species proper, which, as they grow to be six and even seven feet in height, are rather too cumbersome to make desirable , pets. Many stations had one or more oil the smaller Vill'lCtIOI of kangaroos domesti- cated upon them, in company with cockatoos and parrots, magpies and laughing jackasses, and, now and then, a stately and generally ill~natured emu. The mission station of Kamahyuk had one in the person of Joey, a. quaint; creature who was always under foot and amused himself by frantic races with nothing around the enclosure formed by the mission buildings. There is something uncanny about the whole breed of kangaroos. As they sit up to watch you in the centre of the broad, dry plains they look like strange ancient images left to brood over desolation by a. vanished and forgotten race, and under the shade of the solemn mimosas and whisp- ering sheakcs, whither they resort in hot noontides, resemble in their immobility the idols of a long extinct worship. Even in captivity and after long aquaiutance they maintain this eerie quality. I shall never forget theâ€"start that this same “ Joey” gave me one morning. I had got up before day- break to go platypus shooting along the banks of the river, and as I opened the door that led from my room to the veranda, saw dimly in the morning’s gray aghostly shape that stood confronting me with staring eyes upon the very threshold. In the instant that. preceded my reco nition of the tame kangaroo I must con ess that I felt my scalp move as if the hair upon it were about to stand upright, so strangewas the attitude ) of the erect body and drooping paws, sol intent the gaze of the lambent eyes. The next instant the figure had disappeared in the darkness, departing with the soft thud of thumping tail as the creature hopped slowly away. I did not feel my nerves fully in tune even when 1 reached the stream, and missed my first. platypus. , The kangaroo tribe are found in all sorts of countryâ€"0n the plains, in the open wood, and in “ scrub” so thick as to be almost im- penetrable by man, in the “ stoney rises” which, formed by ancient volcanic action, are almost entirely destitute of any other vegetation than a rank, course grass, which clings stoutly to crevices in the mass of dis- integrated lava. Although each species 1 usually keeps itself distinct from all others, ' one may at times see several different sorts of the plains kangaroos feeding together,l although ivhen disturbed each jumps away with others of its kind only. The progress of the kangaroo is rapid, and for a mile or two it requires a good horse to keep in sight of him. After that, hovvever, he tires, and is overtal'cn without difiiculty. l Tue chase of the kangaroo is undertaken“ l ; HUNTING WILD KANGABHHS. i id‘giig‘clsciting and often dangerous pastime. ,game is cornered it is killed bv a blow from -. bay. ~kangaroo hunters arcoften marked from . nature with allensive weapons. ' his enemies. ' waist (lee in if and ushin . the dozs under P v P f». e llilontcal at 8:40 1’.l\l.,lie is certain to have a A kangaroo hunt on horseback In timber, where it usually takes place, it is particularly hazardous, owing to fallen logs and low set branches, which often sweep the incautious hunter over his horse‘s tail and drop him in an undignificd position on the ground behind. Firearms are not employed in this pursuit, and when the the butt, and of a heavy riding whip or from astirrup which is unshippcd from the saddle for the purpose. The dogs used in the chase are a rough breed of large greyhounds, which have not only the strength neccsgury to pursue a flying kangaroo for miles, but' also to attack him when he is brought to The old dogs in a station park of cars to tail with frightful Scars. the records of many tough encounters with an animal which, timid and inoffensive as it is by nae turc, develops in peril o. courage and even ferocity that are rarely found outside the order of carnivcra The. kangaroo seems poorly provided by His powers of biliugaz‘cnot formidable. and his forc- paws are so weak as to seem almost. rudi- mentary members and of little use. llis hind legs are muscular and strong. but are apparently of use only tonSsist liiglil from In these hind legs is found, however, a most formidable weapon in the shape of a long claw as hard as steel and sharp as a chiselâ€"as terrible to dogs as the scythe chariots of thc anoicuis were tothcir enemies. \Vhen run down, the kangaroo, placing a tree behind him to protect his. rear, will seize in his: l'oxcpuivs such indis- crcct dogs as rush upon him. and, holding them firmly, disembowcl than; with asu'ccp of his sicklcliko claws. liven the hunters themselves, thus caught in the vise-like grip of an “ old man " kangcroo of the larger breeds, lmvc sometimes suffered in like manner, and have now and then taken their own turn at being hunted as the enraged animal turned upon them and attacked their horses with blind fcrocityx 'l'lic kangaroo fights with great address and intelligence, and if he can find a stream or water hole in which to await- his focs, will station himself one by one as they swim out. mattack him, either drown them outright, orrompel them to retire from want of breath. Against human enemies. armed only with clubs or stirrup irons, the kangaroo often shows himself aclcvcr boxer, warding off blows very dexterously with his forepaws, and now and then making forward bounds, with rapid play of his dangerous hind feet, which are difficult to avoid. . â€"â€"-W NEARLY 3.000 MILES AT A CL! 3'. Slot-ping; (‘nr Porlcrs who [love “no I.ong-, (-5! Runs in the “'orhl. The only employees of the Canadian Pacific- wlio are with the express trains all the time between Montreal and Yamouver are the sleeping car porters. Tlit'y travel nearly 3,000 miles without a break, and are on the road for nearly six days. It is a hard life, but at both ends of the route the porters have an opportunity to rest, though even then they hardly get sutlicient recuper- ation. For two or three nights the porter is not likely to get over three or four hours. sleep a night, and he is lucky if he gets that. He is his own conductor, and collecting the sleeping car tickets and accounting for them adds considerably to his work. Leaving busy time at Ottawa shortly after midnight, pretty. TIT BITS. Solicitous- Aged husband (anxiously): “I under- stand you wereongagcd to him before we were married? ” Young wife 2 “ Yes, but he‘s single yet, and there’s certainly no harm in his asking how your Cough is getting along." Parting Panes. “ Good-by, my dear friend, I am going to leave. you. I uni going to Canada and vaill prolrrbif never comeback,” said aIVew k ork youth ."J "‘lhooly. “ \Viil l ncvel‘ sec you again '2 ” “Never.” “ I say, do me one last favor. Lend inc ' traditional raven‘s wing. (IKE NIGHT IN HURDISTAN. . ATrnvoiler “lie is Resolved filencci'orth: lo Avoid llizil Land. “ Talk about OXPPFICHCCS that turn Ono‘s 1 hair gray in a night,” said a gentleman Wiiose curling locks were as black as the “ Ibad one once which, according to authorities, ought to have made me liOI only gray, bu bald~ beaded, .if the traditions are right, which I don’t believe they arc. “It was in Kurdistan that my experience occurred. 1 was travelling through that . forsaken country merely for the sake of sec- ing it. and l was acconipaniedby but two men, Jean, 3. French servant, combining in his own personality all the rxcellcncics of cook and valet, and a Persian guide named r Mufti, whom Iliad engaged for the trip. \Vc had two horses and an ass, v liich .lcan twenty-live dollars. " “0, no: don'tl . crease the pangs of on: pai Eng. An Appeal to the Court. Judge Coonbyâ€"J‘ I‘se sorry tocommit yo‘, Blackstone, but Justice am blind.” Blackstoneâ€"4‘chge, in dis case. she am cross eyed. Doesn’t, or dassent your ri'onah rcuiembah dat I’s gibbon yo’ two ob der chickens I stoic ? " a do anything to in- n Too Strong a Resemblauce- Photographer : “ Now, try to look like yourself.” (Noting the effect) : " \Vcll, or, h‘ni ; now try to look like somebody else." Wanted all for HImself. He (suddenly) : “ Do you think the min- ister will want to kiss you, dear '1" She (picadiugly) ; “ Let him if he wants to, Harry. He's just grown abenutiful mous tache. By it's Fruits Smarle : “ That trcc hasn't borne a solit- ary pear for eight seasons." Smiley : “ Indeed? Why don’t you cut it down '3“ “ Because it‘s the best apple tree I’ve got." The Alt of Conversation. Young B.(on his first appearance at a ball to elderly friend) ; “ What am I to talk to my partner about?” Friend : “ Her beauty.” ” llut if she doesn’t happen to be beauti- ful 'Z" “ No matter ; she’ll take your word for it. ’ Children Should be Seenâ€"Not Heard. i ”Father,” he suddenly remarked, as he looked up into the paternal face, “ you are , awfully good to ma.” “Am I? “'6", I hope I treat her as a husband should a. devoted wife,”rcplicd the old man. “ And it‘s all over the place how liberal you are to her.” “ How? What do you mean Y” ; “ \Vhy I heard three or four men in the 'bus say that all you had in the world was in lllffr name." “Yesâ€"ahem ‘. youâ€"you go to bed, sir; and the next time you hear people talking about me don"t listen to what they say.” After Vacation. School Teacher : “ Johnny, you may tell me what “ success ” meansl” Johnny : “The prosperOus termination of and then be has his boots to black, and he is lucky if he gets a wink of sleep before or 3 A. M. in the smoking room when no passengers are there, and catches cat naps if he can. He is likely at any moment to be aroused by a. bell, summoning him 10 one of the berths, and the bell is sure to be kept busy after daybreak. After leaving Winnipeg he has a. compara- tively easy time accross the plains, though. he is compelled to be up after midnight both at Regina and at Calgaiy. At all important stations he has to go to the telegraph ollice with a statementof the accommodations un- occupied in his car, so that the station agents ahead may dispose of berths. He has abusy time through the mountains. As a rule he loses nearly his entire car load at Winnipeg, and it fills up there at once with passengers from the south. He loses his passengers again at Band, and their places are supplied by tourists who are going on from that pleasure resort : then many of his passengers get offal: Glazier, and others come on, so that nearly all the time he has much to do in the way of keeping his accounts, besides his duties as porter. At Vancouver he lays over for two days, and as a. rule he sleeps in the car, occupying it» all the time for the round trip. When he returns to Montreal he has been away fourteen days. Then he has a longer rest. He is 06' duty for five days, except that he has to take his turn reporting at the depot at night to assist the outgoing porter in taking care of luggage. Hie five days’ rest puts him in pretty good condition form]. other two weeks’ seige. The porters say the trip is rather trying, but that there is nothing like getting used to a. thing. The company pays them $40 a month, and they expect to make at least as much more in fees. All of them are colored men from the States and have served on some of the best lines. They say they like the service of the Canadian Pacific, for the company treats them well. Once in a while a man is switched 03' his regular run, which does not please him very well. For instance he may reach lVinnipeg going east with an empty car, and he is likely to be side track- ed for further orders. He has plenty of lcisuie then, but the fees, which form so large a part of his income, are not forth- coming, and he prefers more profitable ac- tivity. 4â€"m-- ~mw~ â€" A Terrifying Subject- lllinksrâ€"“I saw a man turn pale and tremble to-day at the mention of the Anieriv can Navy.“ Kliiiksâ€"“ Eh! Was he a foreigner?" “ No: he belongs to the marines and he can’t swim." A Good Seat. “ (Hi, sir, well I do likethe day that you wickedness and sin.” good woman, I am glad to because And why do you like it when I that his nose has got so red ?” And‘grandma preach 1‘ hear it. ' “My anything attempted.” School Teacher : “Now, Bobby, what isa He takes a pillow and lies down failure?” Bobby: “ Ma says pa is.” J ust Likely. \Ve quarrelled, my sweetheart and I, She’s a. fuv’rite soubrette ; With deepest despair do I sigh, And I worry and‘fret. One thought comes consolingly bright, My remorse to assuage ; I know she will make up tonight Ere she goes on the stage. But bitterness flavours my cup, And my wrath again melts, When I think that perhaps she'll make up Unto somebody else. Late Stragglers Always Suffer. Blitl'er--“ \Vhat’s that 'Z You don’t mean to attend our reception to-night ‘2 I'd just like to know why ?” Blifi'crs-â€"“ Well, ifyou must know, every time I have attended any sort of a gather- iii at your house, Iv’c lost my hat.” iiflérsâ€"J‘ \Vell, why do you always stay so infernally late ‘1” Getting; Rid of a Nuisance. First Little Birdâ€"“ Herc carries a. boy with a. gun. Shall we fly away ‘f” Second Little Birdâ€"â€"“ No, He’d only fol- low us. ” First Little Birdâ€"“ But what shall we do ?” Second Little Birdâ€"“Sit here and let him fire at us. By and by he will shoot off a finger or something and go home.” A Close Observance. Little Girlâ€"â€"“ To-morrow will be Sunday won’t it '1” Ladyâ€"“ Yes. spend your time?” Little Girlâ€"“ Wishiii’ it was Monday.” Cut Out- ‘ Mr. De Uutterâ€"“ Why this sudden cool- ness, Claâ€"â€"I mean Miss Beauty? A few days ago you allowed me to infer that I had at last won your favor and perhaps â€"” Newport Belleâ€"“That will do, Mr. De Gutter. A new yacht has arrived in the harbour, and it is ten feet longer than yours.” How do you expect to A. Question of Dolor- ” Say, grandma, do people always paint the devil with red clothes on because he is wicked, and has evil spirits near him all the time ?” “ Yes, dearie ; redis the colour of grandpa has bad spirits near him variouslyâ€"on horseback, with or without ‘ preach?” “Oh sir,” she replied, “ when you suddenly commenced to knit, and said she dogs, and by stalking, either with rifle or . preach I always get a gOod seat." didn’t know. “Well, then, is it, Scott writes: rode, and on which he carried the utensils necessary to the cuisine. \Ve had bccn in Kurdish territory for four days, had passed through several villages, and I was just be.- ginniiig to think the Kurds were a pretty decent sort fora. half-savage people, when one night we came to a little town that I never succeeded in finding on my map, and I decided to put up for the night. I saw the head man of the village, and despite the fact he was as villainous a. million as I had ever met, his words were those of welcome and hospitality. Now, I had never heard of actual brigandage among the Kurds, who, while they are semi-barbaric and fierce, are essentially a race of shepherds and small farmers. So when the bead man as- signed me a but I felt remarkably secure and rather thankful, despite the fact tliatI knew ' I should have to pay liberally for my accom- modations. I bought a sheep, and Jean soon transformed it into a savory stew. Supper over, I smoked a. few pipes, and, rolling, myself in a. travelling rug, lay down upon a cot ot ill-smelling sheep-skins to sleep. “ I did sleep, and soundly, too. The first, awakening I had was when a shrill shriek mug in my ears, and I jumped up to find myself surrounded by burly rufh'ans, armed with ferocious-looking knives, and to see one of their number withdraw his en- sanguined blade from the breast of my Persian guide, who lay as he had fallen on awakening across his pallet. Jean was ' the grasp of two more of the party, and so frightened that he couldn't speak, I was sure at first that they intended nothing less than to instantly dcspatch both of us, but, as I heard them parleying and disputing, I gathered hope. They ransacked the place, took everything we had except our trousers, tied us tightly, and departed. The but was entirely cleaned out as far as our effects were concernedâ€"portmantanus, revolvers, rugs, coats, even Jean’s cooking utensils were gone. In agony Ilay till daybreak, and then, hearing some one passing, I shouted at the top of my voice, A Kurd entered, and he was not of the visiting party of the night before. Now, I didn't know a word of Kurdish and poor Mufti was dead. , I finally made him understand that I want- ed to be released, but he only grinned and shook his head. Then, remembering the name of the chief. I repeated it several times. He finally shuffled off, leaving me in an intended going to that personage or not. After half an hour’s wait, however, the chief appeared. He gave some order, and we were immediately cut loose. “ Once my hands were free I succeeded in had occurred. He seemed to understand, and scnt for some one else. The party sent for appeared eventually. He wasn’t a Kurd, 'but a. Persiam, and he spoke a little French. I told him of the outrage, and he told the chief. Then he replied to me that the chief said he could do nothing, as the robbers must have been of another band or village. This I greatly doubted, as I was sure I had seen two at least of my assailants loitering around when we arrived, butof thatI deemed it best not to speak. I implored the chief to give me an escort back to the lust town I had left, and where two Englishmen and their retinue were stopping. I knew one of the Englishmen, and promised to amply reward him if he would do so. He finally consented to that, and furnished me with a guide and two asses upon my swearing to him that I would pay the man, he also agreeing if he could get track of our assail- ants to visit summary punishment on them. “ So Jean and I finally set. out, and the next day, hailess, coatless, penniless, and nearly starved, arrived at the head town of the section, where I borrowed some sup- plies from my friend, paid the Kurd who had accompanied us about $10 of Canadian money in Persian silver, and from whence, rehabilitated in borrowed raiment, we set off for the Persian frontier. I afterward learned that our friends of the Kurdish vill- age were notorious robbers and murderers, and that the chief himself had been seen later wearing my coat and riding my horse. I‘ll tell you I never crossed the Kurdish border again, and I don’t ever intend to. I like travel, but in the future I’m going to keep under the flag of some civilized or seini-civili.cd nation. . .W lilllKlEl) ALIVE. A Womlclioppcr 1‘s light in n Ilollow Tree and Sank in a Swamp. Charles Smith, a woodchopper on the High Ridge plantation in Terre Bonne parish, La., was buried alive last Monday. He was with a party of men chopping wood on the swamp just back of Bayou Dulargc. He cut down a. large hollow tree, and in falling it slipped back and caught him in the hollow and then slid down into the mud and water of the swamp, thus sealing him 11 . pThe other woodchoppers saw the accident and rushed to Smith’s assistance. The tree was too heavy for them to lift and con- tinued to sink in the mud. They could hear the imprisoned mun beating on the inside and ardcutly appealing for assistance. They went to work vigorously to relieve him by sawing and cutting into the tree so as to reach the prisoner, but when they had- cut to the hollow they found it was too late. Smith had been smothered, the air in the hollow being completely exhausted. l Cricket Champion. The celebrated Australian Cricket Team, of which Mr. David Scott is a noted cham- pion, is safe against field injuries. Mr. “ The effects of St. Jacobs Oil are magical. I used it for a terribly bruised leg. The relief was surprising.” Members all of athletic clubs would bu alike surprised at the results of its use. l powder hit. would take to shoot ’em. l boss, it will be eight instead ob six ter feed m i when data gal marries, not countin’ de ' natural consequences.”â€"[Texas Siftings. agony of suspense as to whether or no he: explaining to him finally by pantomime what . Real Meritâ€" Is the Clial':i(*tn?l‘l\’li(‘ of Hood‘s Sarsapurilln. and it is inunifcs‘tcd every day in the remark :I‘nlc cures this medicine accomplishes. Drug Win-n v. c sell a bottle of Hood’s oarsaoa. Ella grids say: t :1 new customer up an: sure to see him lhfi'li in a li.:'\\' v. ‘ks :llli‘l‘ moreâ€"proving (mu thr- grand l'(‘~'llls‘ frame. friul bottle war- ‘aut continuing its use. This positive merit Hood’s tharszaparilla )~.I<.x'i“~ s.'\‘ by \‘ll'llif‘ of llic Peculiar Combina- tion, lioporlion and Process need in its pre- paration, and by \\ liich all 1110 i‘cinediz . "nine of the ingredients used is retained. , . Hood 3 Sarsanariila ts thus Peculiar to Itself and absolutely no equalled as a blood purifier. and us a tonic for buildingup the weak and giving nerve strength. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all (linguists. $1; six for $7.. }’1‘:’Fj\[‘ed only )y C. I. HOOD & (70.. Apotheczirirs. Lowell. Mass :00 Doses One Dollar Frozen Out- “ Could you not, if you tried, grant me a place in that icy heart of yours '3" " My heart may be of ice, as you say, Mr. Sophleigh, but, all the same, I am not in the cold storage business.” A Sum in Arithmetic- “ How are you coming on, Uncle Mose 1 “ Poorly, poorly, thank God.” ” What‘s the matter ‘3" “ I has schcn gals to support, boss. Hit costs a. power of money to fill up seben moufs free times a day." “ Yes, but I heard one of your daughters was going to get married, so that will leave only six to support.” “ Dat's wahr you ani fooliu’ yeaself boss. Dat ar gal am gwinc ter marry one of dese culled politicians, so instead of habin’ only six to support when she marries, I’ll hinge eight moufs to feed, for mighty few ob dcse politicianers, white or black, is wufl' de (t No, ‘German Syrup” For children a inediâ€" A Cough cine should be abso‘ lutely reliable. A and Group mother must be able to Medicine. pin her faith to it as to her Bible. It must contain nothing violent, uncertain, or dangerous. It must be standard in material and manufacture. It must be plain and simple to admin- ister; easy and pleasant to take. The child must like it. It must be prompt in action, giving immedi- ate relief, as ' childrens’ troubles come quick, grow fast, and end fatally or otherwise in a very short time. It must not only relieve quick but bring them around quick, as children chafe and fret and spoil their constitutions under long con- finement. It must do its work in moderate doses. A large quantity of medicine in a child is not desira- ble. It must not interfere with the child’s spirits, appetite or general health. ’ These things suit~old as well as young folks, and make Bo- schee’s German Syrup the favorite family medicine. (D Those Beautiful Antlers. Eastern Sportsman (with full assortment of dogs, guns, ctc.)â€"â€"â€"“ I hear that over a thousand elk are killed in this region every year. What do you do with the antlers? ” Western Hunterâ€"“Sell ’em to Eastern hunters on their way home.” A Careful Host. Country Boarderâ€"“ How is it, Mrs. Hay- seed, that, with all the cucumbers on your farm you never have them on the table '3 " Mrs. Hayseedâ€"“ The horse is lame.” “ The horse lame ! What has that to do Willi it? " “ Well, you see we live way 03' in the country, and it‘s ’most ten miles to a doc- tor.” BREAfi'im FOR Pm- 4mgâ€" RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lu mbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, Sore Throat, Frost Bites,’ Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Etc. Sold .b Druggists and Dealers everywhere Filly Cents a. bottle. Directions in 11 Languages. THE CHARLES R. VOGELER Q 9.. Balflmore, Md Canadian Depot: Toronto, Ont.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy